The Sebastian County Prosecuting Attorney's Office released the case files after a judge denied Kinsey's defense attorney's request for a gag order earlier this week.

Along with the 122-page document are eight DVDs, including the interview between police and Kinsey the night of the murders.

“I could feel their breath on me," said Gregory Kinsey in an interview with police. "It was clear they weren’t going to let me go. So, I started swinging.”

Officers from the Fort Smith Police Department questioned Kinsey, who spoke freely, about what happened that night in June.

“How many times total do you think you swung at him?" asked an officer.

“I don’t know,” responded Kinsey.

“If you had to guess?” asked the officer.

“Six or seven maybe,” responded Kinsey. "I only hit him once or twice after he hit the ground."

According to police reports, detectives found nine weapons inside Kinsey's apartment the night of the murders.

Four of them were machetes.

Police said it was an 18-inch machete that they believe was the murder weapon.

In another report, officers said the walls of Kinsey's apartment were splattered with blood from what police said were self-inflicted injuries.

That same report said officers found drawings of winged and horned creatures, as well as several altars, inside the apartment.

“I’ve asked a couple people like myself, when they start fighting, their consciousness just takes a back seat to the body and it does the fighting for them," said Kinsey. "All they have to do is swing the first blow or receive the first hit, and after that it's like watching a movie. You’re not really doing it you're just watching.”

Kinsey remains behind bars at the Sebastian County Detention Center without bond.

Forty years ago, one of the greatest boxing matches in history took place in an unlikely setting: the capital of the Philippines. Muhammad Ali's epic win over great rival Joe Frazier in 1975 became known as the "Thrilla in Manila."